Complexity of rice-water stool from patients with Vibrio cholerae plays a role in the transmission of infectious diarrhea

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Nov 27;104(48):19091-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0706352104. Epub 2007 Nov 16.

Abstract

At the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, one-half of the rice-water stool samples that were culture-positive for Vibrio cholerae did not contain motile V. cholerae by standard darkfield microscopy and were defined as darkfield-negative (DF(-)). We evaluated the host and microbial factors associated with DF status, as well as the impact of DF status on transmission. Viable counts of V. cholerae in DF(-) stools were three logs lower than in DF(+) stools, although DF(-) and DF(+) stools had similar direct counts of V. cholerae by microscopy. In DF(-) samples, non-V. cholerae bacteria outnumbered V. cholerae 10:1. Lytic V. cholerae bacteriophage were present in 90% of DF(-) samples compared with 35% of DF(+) samples, suggesting that bacteriophage may limit culture-positive patients from producing DF(+) stools. V. cholerae in DF(-) and DF(+) samples were found both planktonically and in distinct nonplanktonic populations; the distribution of organisms between these compartments did not differ appreciably between DF(-) and DF(+) stools. This biology may impact transmission because epidemiological data suggested that household contacts of a DF(+) index case were at greater risk of infection with V. cholerae. We propose a model in which V. cholerae multiply in the small intestine to produce a fluid niche that is dominated by V. cholerae. If lytic phage are present, viable counts of V. cholerae drop, stools become DF(-), other microorganisms bloom, and cholera transmission is reduced.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Bacteriolysis
  • Bacteriophages / isolation & purification
  • Bacteriophages / physiology
  • Bangladesh / epidemiology
  • Cholera / epidemiology
  • Cholera / microbiology
  • Cholera / transmission*
  • Colony Count, Microbial
  • Disease Outbreaks
  • Disease Transmission, Infectious*
  • Feces / microbiology*
  • Humans
  • Incidence
  • Intestine, Small / virology
  • Microscopy / methods
  • Mucins
  • Risk
  • Vibrio cholerae O1 / classification
  • Vibrio cholerae O1 / growth & development
  • Vibrio cholerae O1 / isolation & purification*
  • Vibrio cholerae O1 / virology
  • Vibrio cholerae O139 / growth & development
  • Vibrio cholerae O139 / isolation & purification*
  • Vibrio cholerae O139 / virology

Substances

  • Mucins